If you assign the results of a substition regex, that doesn't assign the new string. Regex substitutions are done in-place. The return value is the number of substitutions, not the new string.

It sounds like you want to do too many operations on one line. You're not changed by the character, my friend! Just do your assignment, then your substitution.

my $new = $_; $new =~ s/foo/bar/g;

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In reply to Re: substr on $_ by dragonchild
in thread substr on $_ by gisrob

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